Since UrbanToronto’s last update in October, 2025, the 28-storey Park Road condo in Toronto’s Bloor-Yorkville neighbourhood has topped off and seen its crane removed. Designed by Diamond Schmitt Architects for Capital Developments, the project occupies a compact triangular site bounded by Church Street, Collier Street, and Park Road, boasting a distinctive wedge-shaped massing with a sweeping curve for its south elevation.
By March, 2026, below, Park Road had reached its full height. The mechanical penthouse was fully formed but still unclad, with exposed concrete walls above the completed residential floors and glazing installed along portions of the upper enclosure. Gold-toned, pre-finished aluminum panels and reflective floor-to-ceiling glazing wrap nearly the entire facade, accented by projecting mullion caps and slender framing elements. The uppermost residential floor also remains unclad, while the construction hoist continues to rise along the north elevation.
In April, 2026, a massive Mammoet mobile crane occupied Church Street as crane dismantling was underway overhead, and as rooftop mechanical equipment was lifted into place. The fully deployed multi-axle Liebherr LTM 1650 is steadied by outriggers extending across the roadway, and substantial rear counterweights. Behind it, Park Road's west elevation highlights the tower’s wedge-shaped profile as floor plates narrow toward the north end of the site.
In May, 2026, the crane was gone, and the gold-toned panel system extended across all residential floors while the construction hoist remained affixed to the north elevation. From this angle, we see Park Road's tapered west elevation and its series of stepped cantilevers and projecting balconies.
Another shot from May, this one from a balcony near the top of One Bloor East, revealed the sweeping south elevation tracing Church Street below. Sections of the mechanical penthouse remain unfinished, while the tower's footprint is clearly legible from above, broadening toward the east and tapering toward the west. The rooftop mechanical enclosure occupies the wider eastern portion of the roof.
This month, we look up from across Church Street and Park Road toward the east elevation. Vertical fins articulate the first three storeys, while changes around the fourth floor create both a cantiliever and a step-back, transitioning between the lower levels and the tower above. Beginning at the 15th floor, balconies introduce depth to the otherwise flat elevation. At grade, temporary fencing and construction staging remain in place as finishing work progresses, while a mobile boom lift positions workers beneath the fourth-floor cantilever along the south elevation to complete soffit and exterior detailing.
With the lower levels' exterior is now largely complete, attention has shifted to the mechanical penthouse. Cladding now wraps most of the west face and the curving south elevation, while sections at the very top remain exposed and await final installations. White and orange tarps cover active work areas, above which a parapet wall traces the building’s profile, interrupted by an opening along the south side. At the tapered west end of the roof, materials and equipment remain staged as work advances toward completion.
Park Road stands 97.43m tall and will deliver 303 condominium units.
UrbanToronto will continue to follow progress on this development, but in the meantime, you can learn more about it from our Database file, linked below. If you'd like, you can join in on the conversation in the associated Project Forum thread or leave a comment in the space provided on this page.
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UrbanToronto's research and data service, UTPro, provides comprehensive data on construction projects in the Greater Golden Horseshoe—from proposal through to completion. Other services include Instant Reports, downloadable snapshots based on location, and a daily subscription newsletter, New Development Insider, that tracks projects from initial application.
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